Objective: To study the possible distribution of metallo-beta-lactamases among nosocomial Pseudomonas isolates in a Greek hospital with a recent high prevalence of carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas isolates.
Methods: All carbapenem-resistant (imipenem- and/or meropenem-resistant) (MICs > 8 mg/L) Pseudomonas non-replicate isolates recovered from clinical infections in the Microbiology Laboratory of Saint Demetrios Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece, from April 1998 to November 2000 were studied for the presence of metallo-beta-lactamases. They were tested by a disk diffusion test, PCR analysis, and nucleotide sequencing. DNA fingerprints were obtained by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of XbaI-digested chromosomal DNA.
Results: In total, 24 carbapenem-resistant isolates (23 P. aeruginosa and one P. putida) were recovered. The serotypes observed among the P. aeruginosa isolates were, in order of decreasing frequency, O:11 (52%), O:3 and O:12 (17% each), and O:6 (13%). PFGE grouped 17 of the P. aeruginosa isolates into four clusters, each containing from two to seven isolates, while the remaining isolates exhibited unique genotypes. blaVIM-2 was detected in the P. putida isolate and a P. aeruginosa serotype O:3 isolate. The latter strain was genotypically distinct from other contemporaneous or older carbapenem-resistant P. aeruginosa Greek isolates.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that, although the prevalence of metallo-beta-lactamases is low, the integron-associated blaVIM genes can spread to P. aeruginosa serotypes that have not been previously associated with carbapenem resistance in our region, as well as to other pseudomonal species.